St Ladoca's Church, Ladock

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St Ladoca’s Church, Ladock
St Ladoca’s Church, Ladock
St Ladoca’s Church, Ladock is located in Cornwall
St Ladoca’s Church, Ladock
St Ladoca’s Church, Ladock
50°19′13.16″N 4°57′35.27″W / 50.3203222°N 4.9597972°W / 50.3203222; -4.9597972
LocationLadock
CountryEngland
DenominationChurch of England
History
DedicationSt Ladoca
Administration
ProvinceProvince of Canterbury
DioceseDiocese of Truro
ArchdeaconryCornwall
DeaneryPowder
ParishLadock
Listed Building – Grade I
Official nameChurch of St Ladoca
Designated17 October 1984
Reference no.1310553
Edward Arthur Fellowes Prynne altar front at Ladock Church.

St Ladoca's Church, Ladock, is a Grade I listed[1] parish church in the Church of England Diocese of Truro in Ladock, Cornwall, England, UK.

The parish church of St Ladoca has a fine west tower built of granite blocks. The north side of the church is 13th-century in date while the south aisle is 15th-century and the chancel was much repaired and altered by George Edmund Street in 1862–64. The contractor was Messrs Bone of Liskeard and the restoration cost £2,000. Most of the walls were rebuilt. The gallery was taken down, and the church was partly re-roofed. The mullions and dressings of the windows were in Ham Hill stone. New seating was provided of stained deal, with carved ends, and the sittings were covered with scarlet pile carpeting. The pulpit was new, of open stone and woodwork, consisting of pitch pine with ebony shafts, and stone base by Clarke of Bath. A new low oak screen divided the nave from the chancel. The chancel was improved in 1863 with an east window of stained glass by Morris, Marshall, Faulkner & Co. of London, representing the different Marys mentioned in the New Testament, the centre light representing Mary, the sister of Lazarus, at the house of Simon the leper. Additional windows by the same firm, designs by Edward Coley Burne-Jones and Ford Maddox Brown, were placed in 1869-70 and 1897.[2] The windows have been characterised as "the best display of Morris & Co. glass in Cornwall"; William Morris had been a pupil of G. E. Street, and this project was their first professional collaboration.[3] The flooring of the aisles was laid with squares of Portland stone, diagonally placed with black and red tiles. The chancel was laid with encaustic tiles of different colours, alternating with Portland stone. The reredos was made with dark encaustic tiles on the two sides with carved alabaster in the centre, and a super-altar of polished serpentine, with a painted front by Edward Arthur Fellowes Prynne. In the centre of the reredos, a large cross of Irish marble was inlaid.[4]

Interesting features include the carved base of the rood screen and the font of Catacleuse stone. The feast traditionally celebrated in the parish is held on the Sunday after the first Thursday in January.[5]

Parish status

The church is in a joint parish with

Bells

Organ

References

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